Tag: Athens

  • Soup kitchens and begin-ups: Greek bailout era ends

    Dimitris Koumatsioulis is pictured in a factory setting, with industrial drums visible in the background Image caption For Dimitris Koumatsioulis the bailout generation used to be all approximately grimly maintaining on

    “We thought of suicide time and again”, says Dimitris Koumatsioulis, “as a result of whilst you achieve the brink of a cliff you either fall off otherwise you grip it and cling on.”

    “But we stated no – we struggled, and that’s the reason why we’re nonetheless here”.

    The cliff area for him loomed in 2011, a 12 months after Greece collapsed into monetary predicament, taking his manufacturing unit Viome with it.

    Based within the northern city of Thessaloniki, it produced adhesive for the tiles made in its figure corporate, Philkeram-Johnson.

    A once successful Greek industry was an iconic predicament bankruptcy, leaving dozens of staff in peril of losing their livelihoods.

    Image caption Many like Fotini rely on the soup kitchens in spite of intended economic improvements

    Fifty-four-year-vintage Fotini, who was once laid off 3 years in the past, is certainly one of the few who will talk overtly. This proud nation has struggled to accept its loss of dignity.

    “i don’t see the trouble coming to an end,” she says. “we are wired and offended because we don’t have jobs. I’m embarrassed that i will not purchase my little grandchildren a gift. We simply wish to are living quite simply in our own properties so we will be able to look our children in the eyes.”

    ‘Some form of balance’

    Young start-up companies are fuelling a way of recovery, breathing existence into Greece’s moribund economy.

    They’re drawing again home a few of the five hundred,000 Greeks who emigrated in the course of the crisis; the “reverse mind-drain” is important if Greece is to rebuild.

    At Possible, a web based human instruments corporate, 20- and 30-somethings exude optimism in their shiny Athens place of job.

    Symbol caption Tassos and Alexia are younger Greeks who can see proof of enhancements

    “When I got here house on vacation within the middle of the problem, you want to see in other folks’s faces they have been unhappy and angry,” says Tassos Kakalis, who has back from London. “Now I Feel it’s getting a lot higher, persons are choosing up the items.”

    “It Is difficult to mention we have exited the hindrance – that’s an phantasm,” cautions his colleague, Alexia Mandriali. “But The incontrovertible fact that we now not have any issues of whether or not we will be within the eurozone the next day to come – that may be giving us some sort of steadiness.”

    What obstacle?

    Even on the top of economic depression, i discovered Greeks to be a very resilient people. Buddies traveling may question me “where is the main issue?”, as they wandered among the nonetheless-bustling cafes and stores of Athens.

    You could see it: within the shuttered companies, within the homeless and the begging – a up to now unfamiliar sight in the town.

    However so much of all you might want to pay attention it, in the tales of complication from a nation where family provides the safety internet, but the place even that was breaking down.

    8 years on, Greece appears like the worst is at the back of it. A boom in tourism, its biggest business, helps, with a report 32 million guests anticipated this year, greater than double the number in 2010.

    The pain of its worst monetary obstacle in living memory may take a technology to ease.

    But a ray of desire is beginning to flicker here.

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  • Greece wildfires: New emergency chiefs appointed

    Firefighters and volunteers try to extinguish a wildfire raging in Verori, near Loutraki city, Peloponnese, southern Greece, 24 July 2018 Symbol copyright EPA Image caption Dozens of individuals were killed in ultimate month’s fires

    Greece has appointed new heads of key emergency products and services following last month’s deadly wildfires near Athens.

    A observation from the high minister’s administrative center on Sunday said that the heads of the police power and fireplace brigade had each been changed by means of their deputies.

    It comes two days after resignation of the civil protection minister.

    the government has been strongly criticised over its response to the fires, which claimed the lives of at least NINETY other folks.

    Greeks ‘despatched by way of police into path of hearth’ In photos: Wildfires devastate Greek area

    the government has said the fires had been began via arsonists and blamed illegal construction for blocking off break out routes.

    Alternatively, a catalogue of mistakes in government’ handing of the fires emerged earlier this week.

    According to one senior skilled, police arrange diversions that despatched drivers into the trail of the fireplace, while a separate study found that authorities did not carry an alarm to allow residents and tourists to get away.

    The households of a pair of their 70s who have been killed in the fires are suing police, fire, civil defence and neighborhood leaders over their deaths.

    Fanned through strong winds, the flames unfold throughout the Attica Peninsula, with the resort town of Mati a few of the worst-affected spaces.

  • Greek fires: Residents ‘worsened disaster’ through unlawful development

    Aerial view of Mati Image copyright Reuters Image caption The beach the city of Mati, east of Athens, has been the hardest-hit community

    Greek Defence Minister Panos Kammenos informed the BBC that unlawful development has contributed to 1 of the country’s worst-ever wildfire disasters.

    He stated construction via citizens between wooded spaces used to be a “crime” that had ended in blocking break out routes.

    Mr Kammenos was confronted via angry locals as he visited areas devastated via fires east of Athens this week.

    At least 81 other folks died and seek teams concern they will in finding further sufferers as dozens extra are missing.

    Arriving within the fireplace zone within the the town of Mati on Thursday, Mr Kammenos was surrounded via citizens who accused him of forsaking them.

    Symbol copyright Copernicus Image caption EU satellite provider Copernicus produced a map showing the almost whole devastation of residential spaces

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  • Greece wildfires: Families left homeless as village of Mati is destroyed

    Symbol caption Katerina Pantelidis (R) stated her house was once almost utterly destroyed “in seconds”

    Katerina Pantelidis used to be gazing the local information on Monday night time and says the record about wildfires spreading urged that the wind path supposed Mati may avoid the flames. However, she says, minutes later she smelt burning and appeared out of doors to see the pine timber on fire, and heard her windows spoil.

    She picked up her two cats, and attempted to pick out up her dog, however needed to go away him while he bumped into a smoke-crammed part of the home. She ran together with her parents to the seashore, at the side of hundreds of others escaping the flames and smoke. Her house used to be destroyed.

    Many swam into the ocean, but Katerina remained on shore along with her cats and elderly parents, breathing through their garments and waiting five hours for the coastguard. Incredibly, the dog survived – Katerina later discovered him hiding in a again room underneath a damaged window.

    Scores killed as blaze ‘struck like flamethrower’ ‘A loved one died in the ocean’ – Eyewitness debts

    on the local Ramada resort, staff had to evacuate masses of holiday makers, and despite the fact that the construction escaped the inferno, people are being advised not to stay here. Suitcases line the reception and forecourt as holidaymakers determine the place to move, while workforce and locals face the reality that their main source of income, tourism, will now be affected.

    This Night there’s still no electricity, many roads are closed off and it’s pitch black at the streets excluding the flashing lighting of police automobiles and hearth engines as they continue to survey the wear and tear and try to stop any secondary fires breaking out.

    Dozens of Greek households who have been left homeless are collecting at the Marathon Seaside Resort, the makeshift relief centre, with volunteers bringing contemporary food, water, clothes and comfort to these who’ve just lost the whole thing.

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  • China’s investment in Greece tangles Europe relations

    Since 2008, Chinese business leaders have agreed to almost $9 billion worth of infrastructure and business deals — equivalent to about 5 percent of Greek gross domestic product — involving ports, te

    ATHENS, Greece — Unlike many in Europe, Chinese investors saw the Greek economic crisis of the past decade not as a disaster but as an opportunity.

    Since 2008, Chinese business leaders have agreed to almost $9 billion worth of infrastructure and business deals — equivalent to about 5 percent of Greek gross domestic product — involving ports, telecommunications companies, energy facilities, real estate and tourism, according to the American Enterprise Institute.

    For many, it’s a case study of how Chinese investment dollars lead to political payoffs. As Greek political leaders feuded with principal members of the European Union — notably Germany — over an imposed policy of harsh austerity, China offered an economic lifeline. In return, Greece became a leading voice inside the EU to take a softer line on China’s political failings and to offer a warmer welcome to Chinese investments.

    SEE ALSO: China’s foothold in Europe

    “The Greek economy is thirsty for investments, and the presence of Chinese companies is important and we welcome it,” Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras said in September during a business conference in Thessaloniki that featured representatives of Chinese business.

    Although the economic situation has improved, Greece remains mired in a decade of economic turmoil. The unemployment rate still tops 20 percent, growth lags and punitive high taxes are necessary to pay off a debt burden that amounts to 180 percent of GDP.

    The Institute of International Economic Relations, in a major survey of the burgeoning Sino-Greek economic relations released in December, noted that “Greece’s debt crisis has definitely contributed to the rapprochement between Athens and Beijing.”

    SEE ALSO: China’s involvement in Piraeus, Greece

    Chinese officials have openly played on the tensions between Greece and its fellow EU states. The state-controlled Chinese news site Global Times noted in an editorial that “different from the EU, which has treated Athens as a delinquent borrower, Beijing designates the country as a ‘trusted partner.’”

    At a popular level, Greeks are split. Many are thankful that China invested at a time when few other foreigners would take a chance and say Greece badly needed the cash and the jobs. A Pew Research Center survey in early 2017 found that 50 percent of Greeks had a positive attitude toward China, compared with 40 percent negative. The Greek pollster Kapa Research last year found China behind only Russia among countries that Greeks would most like to see closer bilateral relations.

    Culture clash 

    But others are concerned about Chinese influence and Chinese-style management in a southern European country, where management traditionally respects labor rights and workplace conditions.

    China Ocean Shipping Co., or COSCO, a state-owned company, purchased a majority stake in the port of Piraeus from the Greek government in 2016 for $456 million — the largest Chinese investment in Greece to date. The port is now a major node in China’s $1 trillion Belt and Road initiative, a system of trade routes and infrastructure projects that follow the old Silk Road and maritime passages through the Indian Ocean and Suez Canal.

    Labor unions negotiating a new contract with COSCO are likely to have to accept lower wages. Since 2009, when a COSCO subsidiary purchased two piers at Piraeus, workers lost overtime and faced pay cuts of 30 percent.

    “This deal shouldn’t make the port into a Chinese colony,” said Giorgos Gogos, secretary of the Piraeus dockworkers union. “It’s important to secure good labor conditions and make sure the state actually profits from the investment.”

    As real estate prices in Greece continue to fall, 850 Chinese nationals have purchased properties worth more than $310,000, making them eligible for Golden Visas that allow them to travel within 26 European countries that have eliminated internal border controls. Golden Visas have generated more than $500 million in revenue for Athens, according to Enterprise Greece, a state economic development agency.

    Even so, Chinese money is raising political questions about Beijing’s influence in Greece and its long-term ambitions for countries all along Europe’s eastern flank.

    In June, Greece’s left-wing government surprised European leaders by blocking a critical EU statement at the U.N. Summit on China’s human rights record. A year earlier, Greece, Croatia and Hungary — where Chinese investments are also extensive — opposed a joint EU statement on China’s military expansion in the South China Sea. Without the required consensus, the EU statement was blocked.

    “China uses Greece in order to have a strong foothold in the European Union,” said Michael Tsinisizelis, a professor of international and European studies at the University of Athens.

    Greece is in line for membership in Beijing’s Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank. In November, the government sent a delegation to the so-called 16+1 annual summit of China with 16 Eastern and Central European nations. Athens and Beijing in May signed a three-year action plan to guide investment and trade deals. In December, French President Emmanuel Macron delivered an ardent speech under the Acropolis, where he expressed concern about Greek and European economic weaknesses that Beijing could target and keep the bloc from speaking with a united voice about global issues.

    “Our European sovereignty is what will enable us to be digital champions, build a strong economy, and make us an economic power in this changing world and not be subjected to the law of the fittest — the Americans and, soon, the Chinese — but our own law,” he said.

    China is now the EU’s second-biggest trading partner behind the United States. In 2016, China spent $40 billion compared with $23 billion in the prior year.

    Regulation

    While COSCO is expanding its footprint at Piraeus, among the world’s fastest-growing ports, the EU is looking to closely regulate foreign investments in European strategic assets, including ports.

    “There’s a general uneasiness in the EU concerning Chinese investments,” said Polyxeni Davarinou, a researcher at the Institute of International Economic Relations in Athens. “The EU wants to have a better control. At the same time, though, Greece and Eastern European countries really need these Chinese investments.”

    She said Greece and Europe have the power to contain Chinese influence if leaders enact bold rules to monitor foreign investment.

    “There are voices in Europe that believe Greece is too close to China, and that’s because we’ve given them reasons to see it that way,” she said. “Greece’s problem is how to develop a clear and steady strategy.”

    The survey by the Institute of International Economic Relations noted that Greece is still emerging from a period when it could hardly afford to be choosy about who invested in its beleaguered domestic economy.

    “It is an indisputable fact that, trapped in its severe fiscal and economic predicament, Greece is not in a position to discourage foreign investment from any legitimate source,” the report concluded. “In fact, a certain diversification of foreign investment from countries outside the EU is even welcome.”

    But the survey also cautions that, “engulfed by its economic woes and disenchantment with the EU, Greece welcomes China with a coherent strategy.”

    In Piraeus, meanwhile, cranes are offloading shipping containers from huge cargo ships around the clock. COSCO is planning to invest an extra $372 million to build three five-star hotels and a new dock that can accommodate 14 cruise ships.

    Still, Mr. Gogos, the union leader, is pessimistic about Greece’s recovery. No matter how much Chinese money flows into Greece, he said, the country is still laboring to repay its debts. Greeks won’t see the benefits of their hard work for generations, he said.

    “Nothing will change for Greece,” Mr. Gogos said. “All the money ends up in the country’s black hole, repaying its humongous public debt instead of rebuilding the economy.”